I've been working with a small group of new farmers, and they are trying to develop their new
land from in-town (and wanting to minimize trips out there). I'm encouraging them to use cistern(s) and fill with the current OLD well, rather than dig a new well right away. This is their assessment of their situation. I'm going to suggest they use the existing pump-and-well each time they visit the property, and it
should only take 7 8-hour days of running the pump hourly to fill the cistern with their existing setup. I'm also suggesting to them that they get more cisterns - then the water-from-the-brush-piles idea (with elevated pipes from the gutter) might make sense. Are there any other more elegant solutions out there, folks? -Laura
"So, we have a well that produces roughly 20 gallons per hour. But to make maximum use of it we need to be there every hour to turn on the generator and run the pump for the 5 minutes it takes to run dry. Currently the well output goes directly into an 1100 gallon cistern to which hoses can be attached for watering. Both the well and cistern are very close to the area where we will be planting most of our veggies (about 8,000 sq. ft of planting space to start).
We have a few small buildings with roofs suitable for collecting
water with gutters and barrels, but none of them are at all close to the cistern. So any water collected from them would need to be somehow transported a fair distance.
There are two tall (~25ft) slash piles left over from the logging that are about 20 to 30 yards from the cistern. One idea we've had is to place several corrugated roof panels on the slash piles to collect additional rain water. But again we have the issue of how to get the water from there to where it is useful (in the cistern or directly to the plants).
A wheeled cart could probably hold one or two 55 gallon barrels worth of water, allowing them to be brought to the cistern or crop area and used as needed. But that doesn't feel like a very efficient solution to me. Just getting one full barrel of water into a cart seems like heavy, clumsy work.
We don't have access to any digging equipment other than hand tools, and any construction projects would have to be done using hand tools and/or the few battery powered tools we have (a couple old drill/screwdrivers and a reciprocating saw).
I know eventually I would like to have a system of swales extensive
enough to make active irrigation a less urgent issue. But considering the size of the operation we're looking to start with (1/8 acre+), that kind of digging operation seems to be out of reach for the time being.
Anything helpful come to mind?"